Tonight: ‘Inequality for All’ at URI


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inequality‘Inequality for All’ is coming to the University of Rhode Island tonight.

Well, just the blockbuster Robert Reich movie about the phenomenon on rampant income inequality in America. The phenomenon itself has been here for some time now, says Danielle Dirroco, the executive director of URI’s grad school labor union, host of the tonight’s event.

“Wealth inequality is the issue of our time, and we know this all too well here at URI,” she said. “As tuition creeps higher and higher, the opportunity for Rhode Islanders to gain access to a higher education is compromised and our capacity to creatively address our economic woes is undermined. To make any positive change, we have to begin by educating ourselves. Graduate Assistants United is thrilled to put the University of Rhode Island on the map for this nationwide campus event.”

The event starts at 6pm and there will be a special live webcast with Reich in which we can ask him a bunch of Rhode Island-specific questions. Here’s the Facebook event and below is the full press release from the URI Grad School Union:

Graduate Assistants United, URI’s Graduate Employee Labor Union, will be providing its community with the opportunity to view and discuss this award-winning documentary about income inequality in our nation and the way it has shaped our economy and democracy. This event is held in conjunction with a national campus-based event that will include over 150 universities across the country. The University of Rhode Island will be the only university participating in this exciting event in state of Rhode Island.

Co-Sponsors include the URI Graduate Student Association, NewportFILM, the URI Department of Campus Equity and Diversity and SE Greenhouse. Refreshments generously provided by Starbucks Coffee Company.

The event will be held at the College of Biotechnology and Life Sciences Ryan Family Auditorium (CBLS 100). RSVP to Graduate Assistants United: uri.gau@gmail.com.

The American economy is in crisis. Enter Robert Reich: Secretary of Labor under Clinton, revered professor, charismatic pundit and author of thirteen books. “Bob” as he’s referred to in the film, is our hero and guide, shining a light on the urgency of this issue.  Economic imbalances are now at near historically unprecedented levels. In fact, the two years of widest economic inequality of the last century were 1928 and 2007 – the two years just before the greatest economic crashes of modern times. What is the link between high inequality and economic crashes? What happened to the Middle Class?

As Americans, we’ve been taught that there is a basic bargain at the heart of our society: work hard, play by the rules and you can make a better life for yourself.  But over the last 35 years, this bargain has been broken. Middle class incomes have stagnated or dropped over the same period during which the American economy has more than doubled. So where did all that money go? The facts are clear – it went to the top earners.  In 1970 the top 1% of earners took home 9% of the nation’s income. Today they take in approximately 23%. The top 1% holds more than 35% of the nation’s overall wealth, while the bottom 50% controls a meager 2.5%. The last time wealth was this concentrated was in 1928, on the eve of the Great Depression.

What’s the big deal, you may ask? Didn’t the wealthy earn it? INEQUALITY FOR ALL is happy to acknowledge that. There is no vilifying of the rich here.  The problem is that wide income divisions threaten the health of both our economy and our democracy.

When middle class consumers have to tighten their belts, the whole economy suffers.  We saw this in the years before the Great Depression just as we see it today. The middle class represents 70% of spending and is the great stabilizer of our economy. No increase in spending by the rich can make up for it.

This is the moment in history in which we find ourselves: unprecedented income divisions, a wildly fluctuating and unstable economy, and average Americans increasingly frustrated and disillusioned.  The debate about income inequality has become part of the national discussion, and this is a good thing. INEQUALITY FOR ALL connects the dots for viewers, showing why dealing with the widening gap between the rich and everyone else isn’t just about moral fairness.

The issues addressed in this film are arguably the most pressing issue of our times. The film alternates between intimate, approachable sequences and intellectually rigorous arguments helping people with no economic background or education better understand the issues at stake.  INEQUALITY FOR ALL allows viewers to start with little or no understanding of what it means for the U.S. to be economically imbalanced, and walk away with a comprehensive and significantly deeper sense of the issue and what can be done about it.

For more information about INEQUALITY FOR ALL and to view the trailer, please visit InequalityForAll.com  

This event is free to the public. Please RSVP via email to Graduate Assistants United at uri.gau@gmail.com

‘Inequality For All’ at State House today, Fox and Paiva Weed to attend


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Legislative leaders Gordon Fox and Teresa Paiva Weed will be attending a screening of “Inequality for All” at the State House this afternoon, according to spokesman Larry Berman. But whether or not the Robert Reich film’s thesis – that the historically high gap between the haves and the have-nots is tearing apart America’s economy and social fabric – will make their way from the screen to the General Assembly’s agenda is a question only the future knows.

But at least we know they will be listening!

inequality

The op/ed documentary is being screened at Statehouses across the country to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Lyndon Johnson announcing the war against poverty (which many say America lost but others say has been a “mixed bag”). Here in Rhode Island, it’s being sponsored by the Economic Progress Institute and General Assembly leadership. It will be shown in the House lounge (popcorn permitted) after the session commences for the day (approximately 4:30 or 5)

Before the session there will be an “Interfaith Vigil” to call attention to the plight of the homeless in America – talk about income inequality – some people slept outside last night in Rhode Island! (please think about that for at least one minute today) The vigil begins at the Gloria Dei Lutheran Church, located at 15 Hayes Street (across from the Providence Place Mall) at 2:30 and participants will make their way to the State House by 3pm, where they will be joined by Fox, Paiva Weed and Governor Chafee.

 

Movie Review: ‘Inequality for All’ this Friday!


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Inequality for AllThe people who most need to see and understand director Jacob Kornbluth‘s newest movie Inequality for All, (for instance everyone involved with the Rhode Island Center for Freedom and Prosperity,) will at best ignore it, and at worst launch into incomprehensibly obtuse “critiques” based on small, inconsequential details. This is a shame, because not only does the film’s star and presenter, former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, outline the history and scope of the escalating crisis of economic inequality, he also opens some possible avenues towards a solution, and even offers up the possibility of optimism.

At 85 minutes the film is snappy and filmed with bright video crispness and perfect sound. Pleasing animations illustrate the statistical analysis, and should be familiar to anyone who has seen Reich cover these ideas on YouTube. What this seamless presentation style does is lower all barriers between the audience and Reich, allowing us to concentrate on the man and his ideas.

Such a technique would be disastrous if the the man at the center of the effort were a boring, dry academic. Fortunately Reich is a powerful, commanding speaker with a dexterous command of the facts and figures needed to make his case. Reich has Fairbanks disease, which is the cause of his diminutive stature (he stands under five feet tall.) This and other biographical details are woven into the movie’s narrative for two reasons. One is to present Reich as a figure we can relate to. Far from simply being an entitled Ivy League academic and Rhodes Scholar (which he is, after all) Reich portrays himself as a man of the people. He was always that kid who was too small and bullied by his peers. He comes from blue collar roots: his father sold dresses and his mother help at the shop. He is unashamedly pro-union.

See the Rhode Island premiere of this movie Friday, 4pm, at the Avon Theater on Thayer St.

The other reason to concentrate on Reich as a person is that the story of economic inequality in America is also Reich’s story. Reich has been fighting this battle against economic disparity for over thirty years. At one point, near the end of the movie, Reich allows himself a bit of bitter reflection, wondering if his entire life has been a failure. After all, he has been ringing the bells of doom for decades, and his ideas and policy solutions have been ignored, even as the prophesied doom strikes us, over and over again.

The film detours at times off Reich and onto a collection of Americans who are living under the burden of our current economic inequality. We all know the stories. Families where both parents work full time jobs only to barely scrape by and accrue nothing in the way of concrete savings or any hope of a happy retirement. These people are taxed at more than 30% of their income, even as the very wealthy are paying taxes in the range of 11-15%. Under such a system are dreams being crushed even as the very wealthy end up with more money than they can possibly spend.

As Reich explains part way through the film, the economy right now is doing great, but the middle class and the poor are not feeling the effects. In the current economic boom, it’s a good time to be the 1%, the rest of us merely endure.

The problems our world experiences due to economic inequality are exacerbated by the effect such money has on our politics. A beleaguered and uninformed middle class can be easily manipulated into believing that the cause of all our problems is not due to a structural defect in the way we regulate our economy, but because of immigrants stealing our jobs, terrorist Muslims infiltrating our society, or as a punishment from God for allowing gay marriage and atheism.

Meanwhile the very rich use their money to buy the favor of candidates, paying lobbyists to convince legislators to pass changes to the laws that favor making the rich even richer, giving them more power with which to warp the system. This is part of what Reich calls the Vicious Cycle, and it won’t be enough to simply do away with Citizens United, we need to reduce the power of the 1% to unduly impact the political system, and this means taxing their wealth and modifying economic incentives.

There is no such thing as a free market. All markets operate by the rules we, as a society, put in place. We have the ability to modify rules when certain people, who are infinitely inventive and always looking for loopholes that lead to wealth, break or game the system. At that point it is important to close loopholes and erect barriers to such exploitation. Markets work best when they are managed and planned, just as managed and planned farms work better than wild fields for generating food.

Inequality for All is based on Reich’s 2010 bestseller Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future and won a U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Achievement in Filmmaking at the Sundance Film Festival. It premieres in Providence on Friday, October 18th at the Avon Cinema on Thayer St. RI Future, the Economic Progress Institute and other progressive organizations in the Ocean State are holding a special screening at 4pm, followed by a conversation about the film at the English Cellar Ale House, 165 Angell, just off of Thayer.

After this special performance the film will be at the Avon for at least an entire week’s worth of showtimes.

Please feel free to contact Economic Progress Institute communications director, Sarah Anzevino at sarah@economicprogressri.org or at 401-456-2751.